Friday, September 2, 2016

Wisconsin is the only state in America which allows in-state bear hunters and others from the other 49 states to come to the picturesque North Woods and let their packs of hounds run loose to chase bears in so-called training runs for a bear hunting season that does not start until next week, and could see 3,000 or more bears killed.Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources records show that 28 bear hounds have died in this gruesome fashion this year, and a stunning 25 of these hounds have been killed just this month.A five-year-old female Bluetick in Iron County, like the one pictured below, was the most recently-reported hound killed by wolves in Wisconsin.The bear hounds are allowed to run through known territories of bigger, stronger wolves, even through areas where the wolves could be attracted by bear bait left behind legally by the hounders, and for years, Wisconsin has been paying hounders $2,500 for each dog which inevitably dies a gruesome death in confrontations with the bigger, stronger and very territorial wolves.Let's look at the bigger picture.GOP Gov. Scott Walker likes to say that Wisconsin is Open for Business, but a closer look shows that the state is Open for Animal Cruelty, too, as I wrote two years ago:

Wisconsin projects a tourist-brochure image to the outside world, and comforts itself with mythologized memories of its Great Founding Naturalists, like Aldo Leopold and John Muir, but the reality when it comes to certain legalized hunting and dog-training practices is sad, dark and downright ugly...

...because legislators and regulators are in thrall to aggressive, one-track gun and hunting lobbies which treat public wildlife as their disposable, personal property - - even enabling bear-poaching in excess of the thousands of bears shot here legally after being run up trees hounded literally to exhaustion.

More disregard for Wisconsin wildlife begins July 1, when "hounders" - - hunters using dogs - - will be allowed to let loose their GPS-equipped dog packs on bears for training purposes before the actual bear killing season begins in the fall.

The hounders and their dogs-in-training will be permitted to race and romp down the roads and through the woods, panicking bears and animals of all sorts which are resting, or feeding, or simply existing in their natural habitat which belongs to all the people of the state...

Now here's the part of the wildlife cruelty story that is less well-known:

Wisconsin hunters are also allowed to train their dogs against a variety of living, captive, caged wild animals.

In some cases, small animals, like trapped raccoons, are allowed to be put into cages that roll - - so-called "roll cages" - - as part of the dogs' training....

And, yes, there are requirements in the state rules to protect the caged wild animals from injury or death during the dog training...but who is around to monitor and enforce those rules' effectiveness, given that DNR wardens are spread awfully thin statewide, and the training periods can legally run up to 18 hours a day?

Who will actually make sure, for example, that a hunting dog is not allowed to get closer than one foot to a caged bear - - yes, that's the allowable practice - - or that if the cage is hoisted in the air for training purposes, it has to be 10 feet off the ground?

And that throughout the hours and hours straight of such hoisting and dodging and other movements that the caged bears are given the food and water and rest they are supposed to have.

And why, if the protections in the rules are effective, are there protocols in place to account for and dispose of wild, captive animals injured or killed during the training...as copied from the DNR's website...

Milwaukee River empties into Lake Michigan

Wisconsin wind farm, east of Waupun

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What water, wetland protection is all about

"A little fill here and there may seem to be nothing to become excited about. But one fill, though comparatively inconsequential, may lead to another, and another, and before long a great body may be eaten away until it may no longer exist. Our navigable waters are a precious natural heritage, once gone, they disappear forever," wrote the Wisconsin Supreme Court in its 1960 opinion resolving Hixon v. PSC and buttressing The Public Trust Doctrine, Article IX of the Wisconsin State Constitution.